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I nodded.

“I see that Halfdead friend of yours was around last night.”

“We had a couple of beers.”

Mama frowned. “He ever say how that poor woman is?”

I told Mama what I knew about Miss Cant. She seemed pleased, though not pleased enough to credit Evis with even faint praise.

Someone called Mama’s name from the street, and Mama bade me goodbye with a final stern admonition to drink the pot dry.

I drained the cup, started to pour a new one, heard Mama’s door shut and thought the better of it. The tea needed to cool anyway, and the sun was bright outside, and I decided a walk in the light would do me good-especially if it happened to lead to Darla’s fresh painted door.

Chapter Fifteen

The sun was bright. I squinted and tried not to look too hard at the shadows the bright sun cast. When I did glance their way, I saw movement in them, hints of form and substance that made no sense at all in the light, but were poetry and magic when considered in the dark.

I wished I had gulped down that last cup of Mama’s tea but I settled for whistling instead. Rannit bustled all around me, stinking, cursing, working and drinking all at once all around me.

Ogres passed, and each and every one dipped their gaze at me, as they had since that night. Darla said I’d attained some odd standing in the ogre community by saving the Hoogas the night we rescued Martha. I still don’t recall doing any such thing, but a town full of well-intentioned ogres is not a situation I wish to question.

I was halfway to Darla’s when I heard the first screams.

Screams and then shouts of warning and then a sudden rush of pedestrians towards doors and the slamming thereof. Within seconds the street was cleared, and I knew without seeing what was responsible for that.

A moment passed, and then the black carriage rolled into view, cloud of flies buzzing, the stench of it reaching and quickly engulfing me.

A much fresher corpse sat atop the rig, cracking a whip at empty air before he brought the conveyance to a halt at my feet.

The cloud of fat bluebottle flies still buzzed and worked. The stench of ripe decay so close to the conveyance was overpowering. I fought off a round of retching, clamped my jaw shut and pulled myself up and inside.

The same red-haired dead woman lolled there, swollen and limp. Her features were melting, like black wax, and when she spoke, it was a barely intelligible gobbling.

“Bravo, goodman,” it said. Flies rushed in and out of its mouth. “I congratulate you on your victory.”

I nodded. I’d dreaded this moment, knowing it was coming, knowing I’d have to decide how much to reveal of what I had seen, that night I walked. “Do you?” I said. “Seems to me that you might have been more pleased had things gone the other way. Too many people lived. Except your pet in the turtle shell.”

The dead woman burbled and spat. Maggots fell from her mouth and writhed in her lap. It took me a moment to work out her exhalations as laughter.

“Whatever are you talking about? And in such tones! Why, I’ve half a mind to take offense.”

I grunted. The smell was palpable, and there were dark, thick stains, busy with flies, all over the upholstery.

“Not that I don’t appreciate good theatre,” I said, surprising myself. “But the smell and the flies detract from the conversation.”

Instantly, the buzzing flies and the stench of a decaying human body vanished.

I took a breath and forced myself to meet the dead woman’s milk-white eyes. Things moved in the corners. She grinned with teeth going crooked in soft black gums.

“You could have wiped out the whole nest without any of this. You could have just spoken a few words, waved your hand about. Poof, no more half-dead blood cult. No more dead women.”

The corpse nodded amiably.

“True,” she burbled. “Though your appraisal of the situation is as yet incomplete. There were other players, other allegiances, other actors involved. My direct participation would very probably have resulted in the loss of far more lives. Innocent lives, I believe you would call them, although in my experience innocence is neither common nor particularly precious.” The dead woman waved a black hand in dismissal. “Too, it would have been so tedious.”

“Can’t have that,” I said. A bloated eyebrow raised.

“Would it matter, if I told you that another sorcerer of my stature was involved? Would it matter if you were to learn that the intention was to plunge Rannit into chaos and bloodshed, on a scale that would quickly dwarf the very worst years of the War? Would it matter if I told you that the huldra wasn’t mine, that your mistrust of me is misplaced as well as dangerously impertinent?”

“Are you telling me any of that?

“Perhaps yes, perhaps no. As you can imagine, the situation is rather too delicate for open discussion, even now.”

I let a moment pass. Then I shrugged to hide a deep breath. “You ought to do something about Oddling,” I said. “The walls are going to collapse any day now, leaning like that.”

Silence. Just a beat, but for that beat, the flies didn’t buzz and the carriage didn’t clatter and the world might as well have been shut behind a thick, tight door.

I wondered if Hisvin would speak or merely strike me down.

“You are a man of surprising resources, goodman Markhat,” said the corpse, without a hint of bubbling or slurring. “I congratulate you. Few have proven so amusing, or dared so much in my presence. I assume you have mentioned Oddling to your friends at Avalante?

“Perhaps yes. Perhaps no. It’s one of those delicate situations you mentioned. For both of us.”

I hadn’t said a word concerning my vision of Oddling to Evis really. But I hid my thoughts, forced a smile. Knowing the resting place of a thing like Hisvin was a secret whole Houses would fight to the death for.

The dead woman laughed, the sound of it wet and choking.

“I like you, goodman,” it said. “No one else dares speak so plain to me. I find it refreshing.”

She put her dead hand on my knee and squeezed.

“This time.”

I managed a nod.

“So we’re done. There won’t be any more new-moon vampire picnics. My clients got their sister back. I got my fee.”

“We are done. Peace and tranquility are restored. Good has triumphed, and evil has been, I am told, dismembered and then burned.”

The carriage clattered on.

“I trust Miss Tomas is recovered from her adventures?” asked the corpse.

“Stop the cab,” I said. “Stop it right now.”

“Of course,” said the corpse. The dead cab man cracked his whip at horses that weren’t there. At once, the carriage began to slow.

“I owe you. I owe you twice, from the War. But if you ever mention Darla’s name again I’ll make a little trip up to Oddling. I’ll come and I’ll break down your door, and I’ll gut you dead. You hear me? Dead. No coming back.”

The dead woman laughed. Her lips trailed black ropes of thick fluid and her withered black tongue writhed and worked.

“Oh well spoken,” she said. “I expected no less.”

I opened the door, and I was out.

The carriage glided away, flies and stench and screams in its wake.

I marched the opposite way, all the way to Darla’s door. She was there and safe, baking a pie, a spot of flour on the end of her nose. She took me in without a single questioning word.

We are “walking out”, as Mama calls it. Mama is always pestering me to buy Darla fireflowers on Sweetheart Days or take her shopping at lunch. Any day now I expect Mama will start pointing out houses in the neighborhood that would be just perfect for a nice young couple starting out.

I sighed, put my feet on my desk, laced my fingers behind my head. One thing at a time Mama. I won’t be walking any aisles until I can stop walking Rannit at night with my head halfway to the clouds and murder and flames in my heart.